* Right-justify the contents of spin boxes, unless the convention in the user's locale demands otherwise. This is useful in windows where the user might want to compare two numerical values in the same column of controls. In this case, ensure the right edges of the relevant controls are also aligned.

* Right-justify the contents of spin boxes, unless the convention in the user's locale demands otherwise. This is useful in windows where the user might want to compare two numerical values in the same column of controls. In this case, ensure the right edges of the relevant controls are also aligned.

Revision as of 21:06, 3 August 2013

Purpose

A spin box is a line edit that accepts a range of values. It incorporates two arrow buttons that allow the user to increase or decrease the current value by a fixed amount. Spins are efficient for small changes of numeric values in a contiguous range.

Guidelines

Is this the right control

Use spin boxes for numerical input only. Use a list or option menu when you need the user to select from fixed data sets of other types.

Use a spin box if the numerical value is meaningful or useful for the user to know, and the valid input range is unlimited or fixed at one end only. For example, a control for specifying the number of iterations of some action, or a time-out value.

If the range is fixed at both ends, or the numerical values are arbitrary (for example, a volume control), use a Slider control instead.

For cases where the values are constrained at both ends and there large ranges of integers (more than about 20) or floating-point values that require precise control, consider providing both a Slider and Spin Box. This allows the user to quickly set or fine-tune the setting more easily than they could with the slider control alone.

Behavior

If the input data has a value that is known to be invalid, display an input problem hint when the spin edit loses input focus.

If the input data is inconsistent with other controls on the window, give an error message when the entire input is complete, such as when users click OK for a modal dialog box.

Appearance

Label the spin box with a text label to its left, using sentence capitalization.

Always append a suffix with the value's unit to the right.

Provide an access key in the label that allows the user to give focus directly to the spin box.

Right-justify the contents of spin boxes, unless the convention in the user's locale demands otherwise. This is useful in windows where the user might want to compare two numerical values in the same column of controls. In this case, ensure the right edges of the relevant controls are also aligned.